Whitechapel - Notes From Warren 23apr102015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/
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Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233339#Comment_2333392010-04-23T09:14:23-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
Do you remember newspaper strips?
Not so much the funnies, the stuff that is now really being done best on the web for the most part. The dramatic strips. The old, old stuff. I was reading a ...
Not so much the funnies, the stuff that is now really being done best on the web for the most part. The dramatic strips. The old, old stuff. I was reading a bunch of the old JEFF HAWKE strips last night, from the Sixties. Proper "Brits in space" stuff, DAN DARE-derivative. But Sydney Jordan was a wizard with black-and-white art, and William Patterson was a much more sophisticated writer than Frank Hampson and anyone in his crew.

Of course, you can count off things like JEFF HAWKE on your fingers and still have change. It's an antiquitous format, belonging to the days of Alex Raymond. The last really attractive attempt I saw to revive it was Travis Charest's handful of SPACEGIRL strips.

A difficult format, too. Hard to produce enough of a kick in those few panels to make people come back tomorrow. Which, of course, gave it a weird advantage, back then, because people bought newspapers. You were part of a confluence of reasons why people bought the paper, not the sole reason people came back every day. Which is why the humour model flourishes on the web -- you can crank off a gag in three panels, and if people laugh they'll bookmark you there and then. Getting enough plot or character or spectacle happening in the same space to make people want to come back tomorrow -- not so easy.

(Also, in a blog format, you're usually also looking at making the piece work at a width of 600 pixels. So you're unlikely to be working in "classic" strip format anyway.)

Newspaper strips are probably on the verge of being handed to the Dead Media Project, and assumed to have evolved into one end of the webcomic. I do think that's kind of a shame. I mean, I'm sure I'll be deluged in links to weird drama comics in the newspaper-strip format now -- I didn't see any in Webcomics Week, but I'm not done reading through that thread yet. And the format is more of a dice-roll in the game of capturing eyeballs than a humour strip. But the daily nature of blogging structure would seem to be a fit regardless.

Maybe I'll do something horrible to you in REMAKE/REMODEL next week.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233353#Comment_2333532010-04-23T10:01:56-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00jones?http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=5390
If you do something horrible in REMAKE/REMODEL next week I'd be a happy man. The Freakangels/x-men challenge was mighty difficult, but I learnt so much from taking part.
I liked that DC put the ...
I liked that DC put the original Superman dailies on the web for free - it was a lot of fun to read. It's a shame that newspaper strips are on the decline. On the other hand, there is so much talent running through the webcomics scene.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233355#Comment_2333552010-04-23T10:09:01-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00DavidWynnehttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=434
Which is why the humour model flourishes on the web -- you can crank off a gag in three panels, and if people laugh they'll bookmark you there and then. Getting enough plot or character or spectacle ...
Which is why the humour model flourishes on the web -- you can crank off a gag in three panels, and if people laugh they'll bookmark you there and then. Getting enough plot or character or spectacle happening in the same space to make people want to come back tomorrow -- not so easy.

Ain't that the truth. I can think of at least two reasonably prominent webcartoonists who I know would rather be doing this kind of material but are doing funnies because that's what gets the eyes on the screen.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233358#Comment_2333582010-04-23T10:15:45-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00mister hexhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4411
The state of newspaper comics never fails to depress me. Things like Marmaduke are still being published - WHY, exactly? There's only one gag! "Look, that gigantic fucking dog thinks he's ...
It's sad and strangely fitting that Charles Schultz DIED the day the last Peanuts strip ran.

I have a fairly extensive collection of old B.C. paperbacks, old Wizard Of Id, Broom Hilda and ... um, even Family Circus collections. (ANOTHER p.o.s. strip that's still going, handed down to Keane's son, who either doesn't understand comedy or just plain hates his job.) They're not high art but they're at least enjoyable. Maybe that's just nostalgia, whistling in my ear ...

When I was a kid, Ernie Bushmiller's Nancy was the Butt Monkey of the comics page. Nowadays, the whole page is nigh-unreadable.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233360#Comment_2333602010-04-23T10:20:19-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00JohnnyWhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=8644
Apparently the long-running Daily Mirror strip 'Garth' was rebooted for the web back in 2008: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garth_(comic_strip)
Looking on the Mirror website though, I don't think ...
Looking on the Mirror website though, I don't think it lasted.

They are still running the 'Scorer' football stories however, which I enjoyed as a kid because they frequently contained boobs.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233361#Comment_2333612010-04-23T10:21:25-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00StefanJhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=961
The local paper carries Prince Valiant on Sundays. That's about it. Everything else is humor. (Unless you count Doonesbury's continuing stories . . . like the current one about sexual predators in ...
Prince Valiant on Sundays. That's about it. Everything else is humor. (Unless you count Doonesbury's continuing stories . . . like the current one about sexual predators in the military.)

Oh, wait. There's also Judge Parker, one of those old lady continuing drama strips. It's shoved back in the classified ad section.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233362#Comment_2333622010-04-23T10:21:33-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Justin Jordanhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2789
Bah, Garfield used to be funny and occasionally still is.
We've never had dramatic strips in the papers I've read and read, but as a creative challenge thingy I'm kind of interested. One of the ...
We've never had dramatic strips in the papers I've read and read, but as a creative challenge thingy I'm kind of interested. One of the trickier parts of adapting to the webcomic format for me is getting a pacing where the reader actually wants to come back while still having the thing feel like a cohesive whole for the collected edition.

If I could talk and artist into, I'd sure give a dramatic strip a shot.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233363#Comment_2333632010-04-23T10:27:20-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Andre Navarrohttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=1561
All I remember, of course, are the comic strips from Brazilian newspapers. I am convinced some of them were drama, even though they were labeled as humor, because it's hard to believe humor was being ...
So I was never treated to "brits in space" kind of strips, and looking at a few samples of JEFF HAWKE online, I am again convinced I was born in the wrong fucking country.

LIVING BY YOURSELF:Pros: You can watch the dirty movies that air late at night.Cons: But you'll sleep hugging your pillow.

This is the level of ocean-deep insight I was subjected to. And they made a movie out of this strip. I am surprised I ever developed a sense of humor at all.)]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233365#Comment_2333652010-04-23T10:33:56-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00helloMullerhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=560
I think — and I might completely be off the mark here — newspaper strips are still produced in Belgiumæ… Classics like Spike & Suzy, and other series in that vein. I can't remember ...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233396#Comment_2333962010-04-23T12:04:32-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00jamesmith3http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=5533
Funny enough, the only webcomic I'm aware of currently doing this is one you've already linked to: World of Hurt. I notice that, in addition to being well-suited to blogging, the format's also good ...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233397#Comment_2333972010-04-23T12:08:23-05:002010-04-23T12:09:04-05:00snafuhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4347
@mister hex Lynn johnston announced her retirement from the strip a few years ago with the intention of reprinting the originals with occasional new strips to act as a framing device. A short time ...
As for newspaper strips in general, I don't read them anymore. When I moved to Sydney I tried to follow a few I liked online, but just stopped after a while. I still visit www.sinfest.net everyday though.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233402#Comment_2334022010-04-23T12:22:28-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00bramclarkhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=1605
In some parts of the U.S. there are still "drama" strips like Rex Morgan, MD being printed. King Features have quite a few like The Phantom and Prince Valiant. Last Wednesday I went to a ...
King Features have quite a few like The Phantom and Prince Valiant. Last Wednesday I went to a comic book store (don't get me started, next week i'm just going to burn a twenty dollar bill while reciting a litany on Why Comics Suck) and found a Spider-Man strip running in Comic Shop News. Sure it took me nearly twenty minutes to make up some story for my son as to why Spider-Man is in Miami fighting Sabretooth (wtf?) but there's still some out there. Quality is debatable and interest is minimal it seems.

I've always wondered why there wasn't more cross-talk between comic books and comic strips. Same medium, different delivery system. I was just flipping through a copy of Lust For Life on my not-a-smoke break. What Spider Watches On TV is in a six panel grid on a page. Slap them all on the same horizontal line and do a page a day and BOOM newspaper strip.

I also never understood why it was so hard to do something other than humour in this style. If you have only three panels to work within for a day and you know you have seven days to fill (Sunday papers tend to have longer episodes with colour over here but let's ignore that for now) then why not apply the three-act structure to the daily? Give us a set up, a worsening and then a resolution/cliffhanger for the three panels. You'd have to write and structure the thing a week at a time for daily publication so it makes some sort of sense I guess. But it's doable. Hell, it would seem to me that an adventure strip would be EASIER. Comedy (well, GOOD comedy) is probably the hardest thing to pull off.

Maybe posting on blogs isn't the route. What about sections on, let's say, news sites. Nobody would pay attention to a Wonder Woman newspaper strip, but having a daily Wonder Woman strip on Comic Book Resources or Newsarama would get read. Fit the content in with a site and you might get some traffic. A blog using that style would be dancing to the sound of crickets I fear...]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233411#Comment_2334112010-04-23T13:00:21-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00TFhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=1307
This has been running in the Irish independent since my deceased grandmother was a teenager. Possibly longer.
I never read it but would miss it's absence.

I never read it but would miss it's absence.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233427#Comment_2334272010-04-23T14:25:35-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00256http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4827
This is only partially relevant but I've been reading so many Modesty Blaise anthologies lately that last night I had a dream about a Modesty Blaise caper.
Modesty Blaise told long-form action ...
Modesty Blaise told long-form action stories and ran in newspapers 3-panels-a-day, every day, for more than 10,000 strips. Which goes some way to suggesting that the format is possible. It might help that, from what I've seen, the writing and art was consistently top notch.

I've only ever read it in collections, so I can't tell you what the experience of reading it day-by-day in a newspaper was like, but it's pretty bloody good.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233433#Comment_2334332010-04-23T14:37:51-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Justin Jordanhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2789
Thinking about it, I actually came to comics by way of the Spider-Man strip, which I think I first saw in the Electric Com pany magazine when I was a little kid. So there's that.
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233438#Comment_2334382010-04-23T14:48:29-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
Modesty Blaise told long-form action stories and ran in newspapers 3-panels-a-day, every day, for more than 10,000 strips. Which goes some way to suggesting that the format is ...
Modesty Blaise told long-form action stories and ran in newspapers 3-panels-a-day, every day, for more than 10,000 strips. Which goes some way to suggesting that the format is possible.

Is/was. It wasn't unique, but it is a historical artifact now.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233440#Comment_2334402010-04-23T14:56:27-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00agentarsenichttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2955
You know, all I've ever gotten here in the States even roughly in a dramatic not-funny funnies format is the fucking Phantom and goddamned Judge Parker.
SPOILER: THEY BOTH SUCK, although the ...
SPOILER:

THEY BOTH SUCK, although the Phantom 2040 cartoon was a fine piece of scifi

]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233445#Comment_2334452010-04-23T15:36:33-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00NickDonaldhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=7215
Oi oi oi! Ease up there agentarsenic: the Phantom is phucking great (sort of). It's still in the papers here in Australia [there'd probably be a revolution if it wasn't] and the Australian publisher ...
Unfortunately, any newspaper in the world today would be as likely to publish a new adventure strip as they would to say "you know what? I think we've got enough ads in today's paper..."

As for the 3 panel adventure: You really do need to grab the reader on Monday, but if they don't read the paper on Tuesday they still need to be able to follow it come Wednesday. And 6-8 weeks later, they need to (sort of) remember how it started and not become aware of the daily story telling formula. Writing good adventure comics is really hard - Kelley Puckett and Mike Parobeck nailed it with the Batman Adventures in the 90s, but that was quintessential 22 page/3 act/4 colour gold. Is the difficulty of the format the reason Travis Charest did one "widescreen" panel for Space girl, rather than 3 square ones? Has the increased sophistication of production of visual media made the format redundant?

Lastly: compare Alex Raymond's first Flash Gordon strip with Jim Davis' first Garfield strip. Comedy comes across as the easier (much much much easier) option. Most of the time, it doesn't even have to be funny (apparently).]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233472#Comment_2334722010-04-23T17:58:06-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00nilskidoohttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=3632
Artist Peter Palmiotti and I have been developing just this sort of thing over the past few months (when we both actually have the time for such)- namely, an adventure-style serial strip inspired by ...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233473#Comment_2334732010-04-23T18:04:10-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Justin Jordanhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2789
You know, if you don't mind chucking money at it, you do the strip as a banner ad on some of the content networks, swapping them out daily with the link leading back to the archives. Come to that, ...
Or both.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233475#Comment_2334752010-04-23T18:08:50-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
Someone actually did that, years ago, I think...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233476#Comment_2334762010-04-23T18:14:37-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Justin Jordanhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2789
Ah, I'm not surprised. I can see lots of potential problems, but I can see where it might be interesting. If you had something as eye catching as Travis Charest (don't we all wish) running as single ...

*Not sure how keen people would be on you piggy backing on their webcomics, though.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233482#Comment_2334822010-04-23T18:46:37-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00freakboxhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=8456
Remember recently when Marvel tried to release a collection of super hero dailys in a more newspaper like format? You should pitch it to them as a web collection where people pay a fee for the lot. ...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233485#Comment_2334852010-04-23T18:56:15-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00StefanJhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=961
Another adventure dinosaur that lumbers about to this day: Mark Trail
The local paper runs this on Sunday, but oddly the strip's chance to strut its stuff in color ISN'T a dramatic story on that ...
The local paper runs this on Sunday, but oddly the strip's chance to strut its stuff in color ISN'T a dramatic story on that day; it's Mark Trail as tedious nature docent, telling us about invasive species and urban coyotes. And the art is mediocre.

Some papers run the three-panel continuing story strip. It's online too. But it's pretty tame stuff. Mark versus contraband fur peddlers, etc. (I think there would be potential in a revamp in which a scarred, half-insane Mark should go vigilante and start murdering global warming deniers and litterbugs.)]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233499#Comment_2334992010-04-23T20:59:17-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Berserkerhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=41
The other huge advantage that a blog has over a daily paper is the duration a strip is up. A newspaper strip lasts a day and gets binned, whereas a blog strip posted stays up day after day, ...
And of course, it doesn't depend on a huge industry to sustain itself in, like news strips did.

Nor does it even have to endure editorial input - though this may or may not be a good thing, overall.

I remember the Prince Valiant strips from the Sunday papers - I think those had a hand in my tastes even now. Those were always dense, being nice blocks of prose offset with those gorgeous illustrations. I was always curious as to why that approach wasn't tried more often, or successfully.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233501#Comment_2335012010-04-23T21:38:19-05:002010-04-23T22:00:13-05:00stsparkyhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2311
Gil Kane did a two tier strip once - Star-Hawks:
I think I could work in that format. Thought he also finished the Star Wars daily that way but I was in error ...
Some info to be mined ...

I think I could work in that format. Thought he also finished the Star Wars daily that way but I was in error ...

Some info to be mined here - http://www.reuben.org/ncs/archive/divisions/strips.asp]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233523#Comment_2335232010-04-24T00:08:11-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Jay Kayhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=814
Can't say I remember ever seeing any dramatic strips in the paper, no--hell, I'm fairly certain the last great comedy strip, Calvin & Hobbes, was already gone by the time I could get my hands on ...
The Kane strips that StSparky posted above me look amazing, though.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233538#Comment_2335382010-04-24T02:07:03-05:002010-04-24T02:20:37-05:00oddbillhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4272
Yes, I remember reading Star-Hawks in the paper when I was very young. It was actually recognizing Gil Kane's art style from this strip in comics that got me into things like Arak Son of Thunder and ...
Back then I recall in daily newspapers we had Spiderman, Star Hawks, a Star Wars strip, The Phantom, Dick Tracy (still, I'm pretty sure), and I think there was a Tarzan strip as well. These I actually remember reading myself, in the papr when I was young. There was also Prince Valiant in the Sunday comics section.

I recently read through a collection of Sky Masters, which was a Jack Kirby/Wally Wood space adventure newspaper strip (yes - Kirby and Wood) - and it was really fun but also kind of a disappointing read. The format really works against telling substantial stories. Everything comes off light as a feather popcorn adventure, which isn't bad in itself, but feels rather weak when read all at once.

Something about the early Alex Raymond Flash Gordons - I don't think it was easy to come by outlandish medieval space adventure filled with scantily clad women and lion headed men in any venue other than the papers. Even when the movie serials came out, it was still easier and more reliable to get your fix from the paper.

Spectacle is so much more easily come by these days in much more compelling venues - this paper strip format just can't compete on the level of spectacle anymore. But back in those days it absolutely did.

I'm having a hard time imagining what the two-tier daily strip format actually can do better today than other more easily obtainable media. Other than just being there every day, I can't think of anything it can do better than say animation, or a monthly comic, or a video game, or a television series, of a film.

Maybe there is value in just being a thing that refreshes once a day - but I'm not so sure.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233540#Comment_2335402010-04-24T02:52:10-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00sneak046http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4574
It wasn't a daily, and possibly a little different to the usual reading habit of the average WC'er but 'Tamara Drewe' by Posy Simmonds' (a modern reworking of Thomas Hardy's 'far the maddening ...
'Tamara Drewe' by Posy Simmonds' (a modern reworking of Thomas Hardy's 'far the maddening crowd') - was serialized weekly in the guardian review between '05 and '07. Using (mostly) a 5x4 grid structure, which if memory serves me was approx a quarter of the size of the berliner format page.

]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233547#Comment_2335472010-04-24T04:16:31-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
So was GEMMA BOVERY.
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233549#Comment_2335492010-04-24T04:53:17-05:002010-04-24T04:53:40-05:00Daniel_Warnerhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=6644
Newspapers were still setting type by hand in the heyday of the adventure strip. The fact that it took 6 hours to create enough comics content to fill an eighth of a page with lush illustration was ...
Also, a daily update for THE PAPER -- a finite, printed piece that people bounce around in for a while is not going to work as a daily update for THE INTERNET or even an rss reader?]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233554#Comment_2335542010-04-24T06:05:01-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Paul Sizerhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=44
They used to run the STAR HAWKS strips in the old COMICS READER magazine back in the late 70's. Blew my mind, I loved those.
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233557#Comment_2335572010-04-24T06:45:02-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
Also, a daily update for THE PAPER -- a finite, printed piece that people bounce around in for a while is not going to work as a daily update for THE INTERNET or even an rss reader?
How do you ...
Also, a daily update for THE PAPER -- a finite, printed piece that people bounce around in for a while is not going to work as a daily update for THE INTERNET or even an rss reader?

How do you figure? It just drops into the flow of the site you follow.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233562#Comment_2335622010-04-24T07:45:03-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Spinneyheadhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4991
webcomicsnation lets creators "tooncast" their strips. There's embedding code to show the most recent page of the comic on other sites, presumably with a link back to the archives.
I'm ...
webcomicsnation lets creators "tooncast" their strips. There's embedding code to show the most recent page of the comic on other sites, presumably with a link back to the archives.

I'm not sure how thoroughly the site's maintained these days, but some creators are still uploading new stuff to it.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233567#Comment_2335672010-04-24T08:12:31-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Albertohttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=5128
Gil Kane was an amazing artist. I wish I had discovered him earlier.
I can't remember of any dramatic strips in the newspapers here, but there used to be a entire supplement dedicated to kids ...
I can't remember of any dramatic strips in the newspapers here, but there used to be a entire supplement dedicated to kids every sunday. 12 pages of comics, funnies and puzzles including a spread of Alfonso Azpiri's Mot:A few years later they stopped commissioning and the entire supplement became syndicated. It ran for about 500 issues, up until last year when they were forced to cut expenses and It finally disappeared.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233569#Comment_2335692010-04-24T08:36:25-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
Tooncasting, that's what I was remembering... ASTOUNDING SPACE THRILLS, and that strip by the Gregorys...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233576#Comment_2335762010-04-24T10:18:33-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Berserkerhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=41
@Spinneyhead - ComicSpace has the tooncasting function built into it too.
ComicSpace has the tooncasting function built into it too.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233579#Comment_2335792010-04-24T11:56:39-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00michaelk42http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=5511
As bad as we know the "standards" (Garfield, Family Circus, etc.) to be, oh but Christ On A Stick how the people would HOWL when we so much as re-ran or otherwise mucked up their daily dose ...
And the syndicate wasn't going to go out of its way to give us anything that wasn't perfectly safe and boring, because they know the editors really just want a reliable way to fill a set space and keep people's mouths shut. And the people that yell loudest want change the least. So everything stays the same.

I remember when I was a kid, before everything started getting shrunk down, we had Star Wars and even The White Mountains (Tripods) running on Sundays. We'll never see the like of that again in newspapers before they finally die as a daily printed object.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233601#Comment_2336012010-04-24T14:46:23-05:002010-04-24T14:46:38-05:00Daniel_Warnerhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=6644
@warrenellis In a printed newspaper all the content pulls together in a finite, credible space and doesn't have to compete directly with free porn, free audio content, television shows, social ...
BTW -- the iPad solves this to some degree by limiting what you can do with it. Comics running on an iPad have already beat out streaming netflix, grooveshark, and chatroulette. If daily adventure strips stand a chance of surviving anywhere it's probably there.]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233609#Comment_2336092010-04-24T15:41:14-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00warrenellishttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2
Wow. Your RSS feeds work really differently to mine.
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233622#Comment_2336222010-04-24T18:09:11-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00frequentcontributorhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=5064
Marvel is putting out (in July, maybe?) what they're advertising as a 3-ish mini of "lost" Captain America daily strips from either the " '40's" or " '50's". I only saw ...
So at least they're attempting some form of revival, even if treating it as a straight old-timey comic strip, instead of a sort of reinvention on their website in in their comics from week to week, etc.

I used to like Alley Oop and The Phantom, but thinking in terms of who might be able to pull something like this off today, in a manner I'd want to consistently read, my short list would be Masamune Shirow, Paul Pope, and Mark Millar (I guess and Grant Morrison, too... could Quitely do a daily?). Imagine those crazy futuristic Ghost in the Shell 2 pages evolved into whatever Shirow is toying with now, boiled down to a few sexy, violent, nonsensically technical panels put out every day (or every other...). Where do I sign up?]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233644#Comment_2336442010-04-24T21:43:08-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00Jay Kayhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=814
@frequentcontributor:
I hadn't heard of those Cap stories, so nice catch. That does remind me, though--would Wednesday Comics count as these too?
I hadn't heard of those Cap stories, so nice catch. That does remind me, though--would Wednesday Comics count as these too?]]>
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233677#Comment_2336772010-04-25T03:53:31-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00sveidhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=4478
Recently, I've been reading (a lot of) Terry And The Pirates after picking the last 2 volumes of the humungous collections cheap in NYC. One interesting thing is that the Sundays are geared to what ...
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=233870#Comment_2338702010-04-25T22:22:42-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00stsparkyhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2311
@sveid - wasn't always the case. Sundays weren't always integrated with weeklies.
Notes From Warren 23apr10http://freakangels.com/whitechapel/comments.php?DiscussionID=8116&Focus=234209#Comment_2342092010-04-26T22:46:22-05:002015-03-31T15:56:51-05:00rickiep00hhttp://freakangels.com/whitechapel/account.php?u=2930
I remember Bill Watterson mentioning that Sundays run on a different timetable than weeklies, so it's pretty unlikely for most strips to do a conventional storyline (and why he hated them so... it ...